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LARGE AND SMALL of it in rotor line are compared. A giant compressor rotor
being developed for the upcoming American supersonic airliners dwarfs one in cur
rent use to power large helicopters. The large rotor, for the world’s most powerful
jet engine, measures in with a 67,000-pound thrust, 50 times more powerful than its
tiny cousin. Both are manufactured by General Electric.
Nixon Careful On Main Points
During Talks With NATO Allies
By MERRIMAN SMITH
UPI White House Reporter
BONN, Germany (URJ)—
"Now, let me see if I have this
right.”
"May we return to that point
for a moment? f want to be
completely clear about your
position.”
These were actual and
frequent quotations from T ’.es-
Went Nixon as he talke in
private with leaders of ’ -TO
and the Belgian government in
Brussels, and as his discussions
went on at even greater length
in Britain with Prime Minister
Harold Wilson.
Imperial
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7
Wednesday, Feb. 36, 1969
Furthermore, this was to be a
continuing Nixon pattern here in
Germany, then in Rome and
Paris. According to his hosts
thus far, the technique of
searching out and understanding
the other man’s viewpoint was
being well received locally.
In virtually every conversa
tion with U.S. officials on the
inside of Nixon’s meetings with
European leaders, they made
one central point: The Pres
ident could exchange views and
explore crisis situations without
agreeing or disagreeing with his
opposite numbers.
Undoubtedly, this made for
something less than fireworks
on the front pages and airwaves
of the world, but it was the way
Nixon wanted his trip to go. His
mission was essentially explora
tory, educational and designed
to profit from the amplification
of ideas and issues during face
Nine Perish
In N. Y. Fire
By PAUL SCHLAMM
NEW YORK (UPll—Martin
Cuniff ignored flames and
searing heat ao intense they
melted his fireman’s helmet
over his ears.
Rushing to third floor, Cuniff
to face contacts, as opposed to
exchanging viewpoints through
stilted diplomatic channels.
During his long hours of
conversation in London there
were, to be sure, black
notebooks Jammed with items
for discussion. Nixon studied
these as a college senior
cramming for hia finals but,
there was no priority of
subjects in many of his
European conversations.
Nixon and Wilson, for exam
ple, jumped all over the topical
lot when they were together,
Nixon had attempted to state
his purposes plainly and publi
cly hut quite obviously not to
the satisfaction of certain
diplomatic experts in govern
ment. These specialists much
prefered the often delicate
shadings of careful diplomatic
language to what could be the
less exciting truth.
peered through the black smoke
and saw a hand sticking out
from an office door. He pushed
on the door and found it blocked
by bodies stacked in a pile.
"I just grabbed them off the
top,” Cuniff said. "Some were
alive and moaning, and some
were dead.”
Nine persons perished and
seven others were gravely
injured just before quitting time
Tuesday when a flash fire fed
by highly flammable liquid glue
raced through a five story
marble and granite office
building on Fifth Avenue and
48th Streetk in Manhattan.
Doxens of other persons were
led, choking and gasping, to
safety. Firemen with gasmasks
used aerial ladders to pluck
from the fourth and fifth floors
33 persons leaning out of
windows screaming for help.
Most of the bodies were found
on the third floor, where the
fire was believed to have
started. The victims were
stacked near an exit door, and
in an elevator that turned into a
tomb.
Fire officials Indicated the
foot of a man who collapsed
from the heat prevented the
door of a third floor elevator
from closing. Several perished
in the elevator.
, Deputy Asst, Fire Chief
Lester Snyder said the fact that
some persons tried to use the
elevator instead of a fire exit
Inches away may have cost
some Uvea.
He said some of the victims
had been "inches from safety,”
but had made the mistake of
entering the elevator rather
than using the staircase through
a door marked with a red light
and exit sign.
"Most of them probably didn’t
think to use the doorway,"
Snyder said. "They panicked.
There was probably a lot of
screaming and shoving.”
He said bodies stacked in
front of the door might have
prevented some victims from
reaching the staircase and sent
them scurrying instead for the
ill-fated elevator.
Flames shot 20 feet into the
air from every window on the
third floor, which was engulfed
within seconds after the fire
erupted- The intense heat sent
popped windows from the upper
floors where workers were
trapped by choking black smoke
billowing up emergency exits.
“Ypu could hear them
sereaming for help," said Mrs.
Frances Kindberg, who works
in a nearby office building. "It
was terrible.”
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